shake
[Feik]
v.
æå¨, æ, 颤æ, éå¨
n.
æå¨, æ, 颤æ, éå¨
shake
shake
AHD:[sh³k]
D.J.[.eik]
K.K.[.ek]
v.ï¼å¨è¯ï¼
shook[sh‹k] shak.en[sh³âkâ¦n] shak.ingï¼ shakes
v.tr.ï¼åç©å¨è¯ï¼
To cause to move to and fro with jerky movements.
ææï¼ä½¿ä¼´çä¸å¹³ç¨³çè¿å¨æ¥å移å¨
To cause to quiver, tremble, vibrate, or rock.
使åæï¼ä½¿é¢¤æï¼ä½¿é颤ã颤æãæ¯å¨ææå¨
To cause to lose stability or waver:
使å¨æï¼ä½¿å¤±å»ç¨³å®æ§æå¨æï¼
a crisis that shook my deepest beliefs.
æ¤å±æºä½¿æåå®ç信念ä¹ä¸ºä¹å¨æ
To remove or dislodge by jerky movements:
æå»ï¼ææï¼éè¿ä¸å¹³ç¨³çè¿å¨ä½¿é¤å»æ移å»ï¼
shook the dust from the cushions.
ææ¤
å«ä¸çç°å°ææ
To bring to a specified condition by or as if by shaking:
èçæå¨èâ¦ï¼éè¿æ好象éè¿éå¨ä½¿è¾¾å°ä¸ç¹å®ç¶æï¼
âIt is not easy to shake one's heart free of the impressionâ(John Middleton Murry)
âè¦å°å°è±¡æ¹çæ¯ä¸å®¹æçâ(约翰·米德å°é¡¿Â·é»é)
Slang To get rid of:
ãä¿è¯ã æè±ï¼
couldn't shake the man who was following us.
æ æ³æè±è·è¸ªæ们çç·äºº
To disturb or agitate; unnerve:
使ä¸å®ï¼ä½¿éå¨ï¼ä½¿æ°ä¹±æéªå¨ï¼ä½¿å¤±å»èªå¶ï¼
She was shaken by the news of the disaster.
她被é£ä¸ªç¾é¾æ§çæ¶æ¯éæäº
To brandish or wave, especially in anger:
æ¥å¨ï¼æ¥èææå¨ï¼å°¤ææ¤ææ¶ï¼
shake one's fist.
æ¥æ³
To clasp (hands) in greeting or leave-taking or as a sign of agreement.
æ¡æï¼å¨é®åæåå«æ¶æä½ä¸ºè¡¨ç¤ºåææ¶ç´§æ¡ï¼åæï¼
Music To trill (a note).
ãé³ä¹ã ç¨é¢¤é³æ¼å±ï¼ä»¥é¢¤è¨åï¼ä¸ä¸ªé³èï¼
Games To rattle and mix (dice) before casting.
ã游æã æ骰åï¼å¨ææ·å使ï¼éª°åï¼ååºå声并æ
æ··
v.intr.ï¼ä¸åç©å¨è¯ï¼
To move to and fro in short, irregular, often jerky movements.
æå¨ï¼ä»¥ççãä¸è§å¾çã常常æ¥éçè¿å¨æ¥å移å¨
To tremble, as from cold or in anger.
åå¦ï¼é¢¤æï¼å¦å å¯å·æåæ
To be unsteady; totter or waver.
ä¸ç¨³ï¼ææï¼ä¸ç¨³å®ï¼æå¨æææ³
To move something vigorously up and down or from side to side, as in mixing.
ææï¼ä¸ä¸æå·¦å³å§çå°ç§»å¨æç©ï¼å¦å¨æ··åä¸
Music To trill.
ãé³ä¹ã 以颤é³åé³
To shake hands:
æ¡æï¼
Let's shake on it.
让æ们为æ¤æ¡æ
n.ï¼åè¯ï¼
The act of shaking.
æå¨ï¼æå¨çè¡ä¸º
A trembling or quivering movement.
颤æï¼é¢¤ææé颤è¿å¨
Informal An earthquake.
ãéæ£å¼ç¨è¯ã å°é
A fissure in rock.
岩ç³ä¸çè£ç¼
A crack in timber caused by wind or frost.
è£ç¼ï¼å é£å¹æéå»å¼èµ·çæ¨æè£çº¹
Informal A moment or an instant; a trice:
ãéæ£å¼ç¨è¯ã ä¸ä¼å¿ï¼ä¸ç¬é´æä¸å¹é£ï¼é¡·å»ï¼
I'll do it in a shake.
æä¸ä¼å¿å°±å¹²
Music A trill.
ãé³ä¹ã 颤é³
See milk shake
åè§ milk shake
A beverage in which the ingredients are mixed by shaking.
æ··å饮æï¼ä¸ç§éè¿æå¨ä»èæ··åå
¶ä¸æåç饮æ
A rough shingle used to cover rustic buildings, such as barns:
ç²çæ¿ï¼ç¨æ¥è¦ç乡æ建çç©å¦è°·ä»çç²å¶ç³æ£ç¦ï¼
cedar shakes.
西æ´ææ¨å¶çå±é¡¶
shakes Informal Uncontrollable trembling, as in a person who is cold, frightened, feverish, or ill. Often used with the :
shakes ãéæ£å¼ç¨è¯ã åæï¼ä¸è½æ§å¶ç颤æï¼å¦å¯å·ã害æãåç§æçç
ç人身ä¸åççã常ä¸the è¿ç¨ï¼
was suffering from a bad case of the shakes.
æ£æ£æ严éç颤æç
Slang A bargain or deal:
ãä¿è¯ã 交æï¼ç»è¥ï¼
getting a fair shake.
åäºä¸ç¬å
¬å¹³äº¤æ
shake down
Slang To extort money from.
ãä¿è¯ã ä»â¦æ²è¯éé±
Slang To make a thorough search of:
ãä¿è¯ã 对â¦è¿è¡ä¸æ¬¡å½»åºææ¥ï¼
shook down the prisoners' cells for hidden weapons.
å½»åºææ¥ç¯äººç¢æ¿ä»¥æ¥åºéèçæ¦å¨
To subject (a new ship or aircraft) to shakedown testing.
è¯èªï¼ä½¿ï¼ä¸èæ°è¹æé£è¡å¨ï¼åå°è¯é£æµè¯
To become acclimated or accustomed, as to a new environment or a new job.
使éåºï¼åå¾éåºæä¹ æ¯çï¼å¦å¯¹æ°ç¯å¢ææ°å·¥ä½
shake off
To free oneself of; get rid of:
è±ç¦»ï¼æè±ï¼ä½¿æ人èªå·±å
é¤â¦ï¼é¤å»â¦ï¼
We shook off our fears.
æ们æè±äºææ§
shake up
To upset by or as if by a physical jolt or shock:
åæåï¼è¢«æ好象被ä¸ç§èº«ä½ä¸çé¢ ç°¸æéå¨æ°å¾å¿ç¥ä¸å®ï¼
was badly shaken up by the accident.
å é£æ¬¡äºæ
è饱åæå
To subject to a drastic rearrangement or reorganization:
大åæ´é¡¿ï¼éç»ï¼ä½¿åå°åå¨å¾å¤§çå®ææç»ç»ï¼
new management bent on shaking up the company.
æ°é¢å¯¼éä¸å
¨å对å
¬å¸è¿è¡äºæ´é¡¿
give (someone) the shakeãä¿è¯ã
To escape from or get rid of:
ä»â¦é离ææè±â¦ï¼
We managed to give our pursuers the shake.
æ们设æ³æè±äºè¿½èµ¶è
no great shakesãä¿è¯ã
Unexceptional; ordinary:
éä¾å¤çï¼æ®éçï¼
âstepping in between the victim and the bully, even when the victim happens to be no great shakesâ(Louis Auchincloss)
âå³ä½¿å害è
æ¯æ®éç¾å§ï¼æ们ä¹åºä¿æ¤å害è
ä¸åæ¶é¸æ¬ºä¾®â(è·¯ææ¯Â·å¥¥éå
æ´æ¯)
shake a legãéæ£å¼ç¨è¯ã
To dance.
è·³è
To move quickly; hurry up.
å¿«é移å¨ï¼èµ¶å¿«
shake (another's) treeãä¿è¯ã
To arouse to action or reaction; disturb:
å¼èµ·è¡å¨æååºï¼ææ°ï¼
â[He] so shook Hollywood's tree that . . . all manner of . . . people called me unsolicited to itemize his mistakes or praise his courageâ (Tina Brown)
âãä»ã æ¯å¦æ¤éå¨äºå¥½è±åï¼ä»¥è³äºåç人士é½ä¸»å¨æçµè¯ç»æï¼æ°è½ä»çè¿å¤±æè¤å¥ä»çåæ°â (èå¨Â·å¸æ)
shake a stick atãä¿è¯ã
To point out, designate, or name:
æåºï¼ææï¼å½åï¼
âAll of a sudden there came into being a vast conservative infrastructure: think-tanks . . . and more foundations than you could shake a stick atâ(National Review)
âçªç¶åºç°äºä¸ä¸ªåºå¤§çä¿å®çè¡æ¿æºæï¼æºåå¢â¦ååç®ç¹å¤çåºéä¼â(å½å
è¯è®º)
Middle English shaken
ä¸å¤è±è¯ shaken
from Old English sceacan
æºèª å¤è±è¯ sceacan
shakâable æ
shakeâable
adj.ï¼å½¢å®¹è¯ï¼
shakeï¼ trembleï¼ quakeï¼ quiverï¼ shiverï¼ shudder
These verbs mean to manifest involuntary vibratory movement.
è¿äºå¨è¯æå³çæ¾ç¤ºåºä¸ç±èªä¸»çæ¯å¨ã
Shake is the most general:
Shake æ¯ææ®éçï¼
The child's small body shook with weeping.
å©åçå°èº«èº¯å æ½æ³£èæå¨ã
The floor shook when she walked across the room.
å½å¥¹ç©¿è¿æ¿é´æ¶å°æ¿æå¨ã
Tremble implies quick, rather slight movement, as from excitement, weakness, or anger:
Tremble ææè¿
éãç¸å½è½»å¾®çè¿å¨ï¼ç±äºæ¿å¨ãèå¼±æçæ°å¼èµ·ï¼
I could feel the youngster's hand tremble in mine.
æè½æå°é£ä¸ªå¹´è½»äººçæå¨æçæä¸é¢¤æã
The apple blossoms trembled in the wind.
è¹æè±å¨é£ä¸ææ³ã
Quake refers to more violent movement, as that caused by shock or upheaval:
Quake ææ´å¼ºççè¿å¨ï¼å¦ç±äºå²å»æå·¨åå¼èµ·åæï¼
I was so terrified that my legs began to quake.
æ被ååäºï¼è¿è
¿é½å¼å§åæã
Quiver suggests a slight, rapid, tremulous movement:
Quiver ææ轻微çãå¿«éçãé颤çè¿å¨ï¼
âHer lip quivered like that of a child about to cryâ (Booth Tarkington).
â她çå´åæå¨çï¼å°±è±¡ä¸ä¸ªè¦åçå©åâ ï¼ä¼¯æ¯Â·å¡éé¡¿ï¼ã
Shiver involves rapid, rather slight trembling, as of a person experiencing chill:
Shiver ææåå¯åå¿«éãç¸å½è½»å¾®ç颤æï¼
âas I in hoary winter night stood shivering in the snowâ (Robert Southwell).
âæç«å¨å¤èçå¬æ¥éªå¤ä¸é¢¤æâ ï¼ç½ä¼¯ç¹Â·ç´¢æ©é¦å°ï¼ã
Shudder applies chiefly to convulsive shaking caused by fear, horror, or revulsion:
Shudder 主è¦æç±äºææ§ãæææå¿æ
ççªåå¼èµ·ç骤åæ§éå¨ï¼
âShe starts like one that spies an adder / . . . The fear whereof doth make him shake and shudderâ (Shakespeare).See also Synonyms at agitate, dismay
â她象çå°è®èä¸è¬çªç¶è·³èµ·æ¥/â¦è¿ç§ææ§ä½¿ä»é颤â ï¼è士æ¯äºï¼åè§åä¹è¯ agitateï¼ dismay
shake
[FeIk]
vt., vi.
shook, shaken, shaking
æå¨ï¼æ å¨ï¼æ¥å¨ï¼èå¨ï¼éå¨
shake a rug
æå¨å°æ¯¯
The house shook as the heavy truck went past.
éè½½çå¡è½¦ç»è¿æ¶ï¼æ¿åææèµ·æ¥ã
The victim described the enemy's bombardment in a voice shaking with emotion.
å害è
ç¨æ¿å¨å¾åæç声é³æè¿°äºæ人轰ç¸çç»è¿ã
The man shook his fist angrily.
ä»æ¤æå°æ¥å¨çæ³å¤´ã
æ¥å»ï¼æè½ï¼ææ
to shake leaves from a tree
ææ å¶ä»æ ä¸æè½
æ¡æ
The two men shook hands.
两人æ¡æã
使忧ç¦
å¨æï¼ ä½¿ç¼ºä¹ä¿¡å¿
éè±ï¼æè±
Try to shake him off.
è¯å¾æè±ä»ã
shake one's head
æ头表示ä¸åæ
shake
n.
æå¨ï¼æå¨ï¼æ¥å¨
ä¸ä¼å¿ï¼ç¬é´ï¼è½¬ç¼é´
in half a shake
ç«å»
(pl) ï¼èº«ä½çï¼é¢¤å¨ï¼ææ
no great shakes
并æ ä¸å¡ä¹å¤ï¼å¹¶ä¸åºè² shake down
ç¨æç©å临æ¶åºéº
to shake down on the floor
å¨å°æ¿ä¸æå°éº
ä¹ æ¯æ°ç¯å¢ï¼å®å±
ä¸æ¥ shake up
éæ°ç»ç»ï¼ä¸ç»ç»ï¼
æ
æï¼ææ··
shake it up
å¿«ç¹ï¼èµ¶ç´§
温馨提示:答案为网友推荐,仅供参考